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28 votes
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Mythos finds a curl vulnerability
30 votes -
Tony Hoare (1934-2026)
13 votes -
Snake game but every frame is a C program compiled into a snake game where each frame is a C program
11 votes -
What's the benefit of avoiding the debugger?
19 votes -
We just turned down millions of dollars. Here is why. [YouTube private equity buyouts]
31 votes -
How NVIDIA turned 'gaming GPUs go brrr' into 'actually we can read the language of life now' (part 1 of 2)
19 votes -
Suggestions for uses of old computer hardware?
I recently “upgraded” my wife’s computer, since it was about 7 years old and I think the WiFi chip in the motherboard was starting to go (and the motherboard wasn’t Windows 10 compatible either,...
I recently “upgraded” my wife’s computer, since it was about 7 years old and I think the WiFi chip in the motherboard was starting to go (and the motherboard wasn’t Windows 10 compatible either, and she wanted to upgrade to Windows 11).
Of course, upgrading the motherboard to the latest WiFi standards meant upgrading the CPU (also swapped from Intel to AMD), which resulted in getting new RAM as well (a rough time for that, given the prices).
All of that to say, I’m now sitting on a mostly functional old motherboard, cpu, and ram. Basically an entire computer sans case and power supply (I’m sure I have a hard drive laying around somewhere).
Any thoughts on what I could do with it? I’d thought of trying to build out a NAS (or some other home server of sorts), but I’ve been thinking that for 2 years and haven’t done it yet because I haven’t really found a “need” for one. I basically just use my computer for gaming, and I don’t really have or plan to have media collections with seem to be the main use case of a hobby NAS.
23 votes -
Fifty Shades of OOP
21 votes -
Brian Eno - A talk on generative music, artists, and culture
8 votes -
Dithering explainer
39 votes -
2025 Physics Nobel awarded to three scientists for work on quantum computing (in the 1980s)
19 votes -
KeenWrite 3.6.3
30 votes -
No, of course I can! Refusal mechanisms can be exploited using harmless fine-tuning data.
9 votes -
Value of a Computer Information Systems degree
I've been considering going back to school and taking some courses that are available to me. With the associates that I already have, I was weighing the options that I have available to me....
I've been considering going back to school and taking some courses that are available to me. With the associates that I already have, I was weighing the options that I have available to me. Computer Science is a classic and could probably get me very far with the "need a piece of paper" folks, but it's more software development than I have a passion for, compared to my troubleshooting, find a problem, solve a problem desires. Cybersecurity is probably going to be more dependent on certs than anything I can learn in a class, especially if it's ever evolving and a degree can be outmoded very quickly. Computer Information Systems sort of has my attention because it seems like an IT based degree with elements of a business setup and not as laser focused on coding. With the courses that I currently have under my belt, it would be more for CIS than it would be for CS, but more CLEP and ACE options so it about evens out.
Does Computer Information Systems hold any water in any of your opinions to what Computer Science has to offer? Or is it somewhat arbitrary anyway?
10 votes -
The Hirox microscope has rotary head attachments that allows you to sweep around your tiny subject like a drone
7 votes -
Are there any good online CS degrees? Is it advisable to enroll into an online CS degree?
I have come across mentions of WGU and Georgia Tech University, hence the question. CU Boulder on Coursera also comes up pretty often. I'm not from the US so can't attend in person.
34 votes -
ToonCrafter: Generative cartoon interpolation
6 votes -
US FBI raids home of prominent computer scientist who has gone incommunicado
36 votes -
How a helicopter built of phone parts survived Mars for three years
4 votes -
ACCESS.bus: The forgotten USB competitor
12 votes -
The birth and glory of Swedish computers
7 votes -
Undergraduate upends a forty-year-old data science conjecture
26 votes -
New website shows you how much Google AI can learn from your photos
31 votes -
You can watch a 1982 lecture by Grace Hopper
12 votes -
In memoriam: Thomas E. Kurtz, 1928–2024
14 votes -
Phonetic matching
10 votes -
A craving for calculation
4 votes -
Retrospective on the introduction of the Vanguard anti-cheat software to League of Legends
16 votes -
US National Security Agency releases footage of Rear Admiral Grace Hopper speech from the 1980s
32 votes -
Solving a couple of hard problems with an LLM
13 votes -
Lynn Conway, trailblazing trans computer scientist, dies at 85
22 votes -
Surveilling the masses with wi-fi-based positioning systems
15 votes -
How much research is being written by large language models?
14 votes -
Computer scientists invent an efficient new way to count
25 votes -
New Foundations is consistent - a difficult mathematical proof proved computationally using Lean
10 votes -
When provided with CVE descriptions of 15 different vulnerabilities and a set of tools useful for exploitation, GPT-4 was capable of autonomously exploiting 13 of which, yielding an 87% success rate
17 votes -
Ross Anderson, computer security expert, passed away
12 votes -
How a woman named “Steve” became one of Britain’s most celebrated IT pioneers, entrepreneurs, and philanthropists
13 votes -
What is your favorite project that you worked on when first learning to code?
I went to university for computer science up until the pandemic started. It was great. I remember working on so many projects that were basic but a lot of fun and others that were a lot more...
I went to university for computer science up until the pandemic started. It was great. I remember working on so many projects that were basic but a lot of fun and others that were a lot more complex but still fun and rewarding. For example, one of the staples of beginner projects is Conway's Game of Life. I remember building that in HTML, CSS, and Java Script. One of my other favorite projects was a website for alum to visit to see alumni news and events, and also to lookup other alum.
What were your favorite projects when learning to code?
10 votes -
Indexing the information age - Over a weekend in 1995, a small group gathered in Ohio to unleash the power of the internet by making it navigable
13 votes -
I got my IELTS scores back and I need help
Overall band score 8. What's the next step? I am an Indian and wish to pursue a master's program in the US. Should I prepare for the GRE and apply for spring semester? Total newbie about all of...
Overall band score 8.
What's the next step? I am an Indian and wish to pursue a master's program in the US.
Should I prepare for the GRE and apply for spring semester? Total newbie about all of this university stuff.
Thanks in advance.
10 votes -
SSD Cloning: Burned by Macrium Reflect, looking for options (Data drives to SSD)
I want to keep this short and sweet: I used Macrium Reflect to clone a Windows 11 install from one bad SSD to a new one. I had to reinstall to repair the Windows install, but it's a done deal, but...
I want to keep this short and sweet:
I used Macrium Reflect to clone a Windows 11 install from one bad SSD to a new one. I had to reinstall to repair the Windows install, but it's a done deal, but I feel burned by Macrium and want to find an alternative.
I was wondering if anybody had any leads on great cloning software for general use? I'm willing to pay money, and it can be online or offline software (in OS or via USB).
I have two drives, a 4TB and 1TB HDDI'm cloning to 4TB SSDs to have on newer devices, since these two are quite old and I got a deal on a pair of Crucial SSDs on Amazon (a brand/line I'm familiar with, they're good drives). These largely have games that aren't installed, legacy data old music rips I want access to, and currently active user profiles.
My goal: clone the partitions over to the new drives, pop them in with hopefully the same drive letters, and expand the partitions to use all free space and be done with it. Ideally I would also have tool I can recommend to others without concern, assuming they have basic computer literacy.
Will CloneZilla do this just fine? Is there anything better, proprietary or otherwise? Any idea how long this can be expected to take over Sata II (I've got a hotswap port I'll be cloning to outside my case, then popping it open to swap the drives).
13 votes -
Douglas B. Lenat - The Ubiquity of Discovery
4 votes -
Obituary: Remembering Doug Lenat (1950–2023) and his quest to capture the world with logic
12 votes -
Rewriting wipEout
22 votes -
Obituary - Evelyn Boyd Granville, mathematician and programmer, space-flight trailblazer (1924—2023)
15 votes -
FedFingerprinting: A federated learning approach to website fingerprinting attacks in Tor networks
6 votes -
Sinéad Griffin of Lawrence Berkeley National Lab publishes simulations supporting LK-99 as a room temperature superconductor
84 votes -
Interview with computer science professor Shaolei Ren about the environmental impact of artificial intelligence
https://themarkup.org/hello-world/2023/07/08/ai-environmental-equity-its-not-easy-being-green A few months ago, I spoke with Shaolei Ren, as associate professor of computer science at University...
https://themarkup.org/hello-world/2023/07/08/ai-environmental-equity-its-not-easy-being-green
A few months ago, I spoke with Shaolei Ren, as associate professor of computer science at University of California, Riverside, and his team about their research into the secret water footprint of AI. Recently, Ren and his team studied how AI’s environmental costs are often disproportionately higher in some regions than others, so I spoke with him again to dig into those findings.
His team, which includes UC Riverside Ph.D. candidates Pengfei Li and Jianyi Yang, and Adam Wierman, a professor in the Department of Computing and Mathematical Sciences (CMS) at the California Institute of Technology, looked into a path toward more equitable AI through what they call “geographical load balancing.” Specifically, this approach attempts to “explicitly address AI’s environmental impacts on the most disadvantaged regions.”
Ren and I talked about why it’s not easy being green and what tangible steps cloud service providers and app developers could take to reduce their environmental footprint.
4 votes